गृहपृष्ठ ∕ Business ∕ Price of gold down by Rs 1,200 per tola Business Price of gold down by Rs 1,200 per tola KathmanduPati December 13, 2024 File Photo KATHMANDU – Price of gold has decreased in the domestic market today. The yellow metal is being traded at Rs 153,000 per tola (11.66 grams) today against Rs 154,200 per tola on Thursday. The price has gone down by Rs 1,200 per tola today, according to the Federation of Nepal Gold and Silver Dealers’ Association. Similarly, the Federation has fixed the price of silver at Rs1, 860 per tola today. It was traded at Rs 1,925 per tola on Thursday. Write your comments RELATED NEWS PM Oli addresses Parliament’s Session, claims progress in development endeavors Let’s continue with good parliamentary practices: Speaker Ghimire HoR meeting begins Chair Lamichhane meets Speaker Ghimire Gold price increases by Rs 2,300 per tola PM Oli extends Sonam Lhosar greetings Top Headlines Scrutinizing Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah´s Thoughts and Strategy1 Relevance of Prithivi Narayan Shah in Contemporary Nepal2 Ncell is the FIRST Nepali Telecom Company to receive ISO 27001 and ISO 27701 certifications for information security and data privacy3 PM Oli, Sri Lankan’s former President meet4 PM Oli extends New Year greetings5 NA team sets out on Gorakha-Kathmandu march to promote ‘unification route’6 Gold price ups Rs 2,000 per tola7 HoR Secretary Rai sworn in8 TRENDING Pathao, Tootle resume ride sharing services after authorities relax lockdown Nepal Army’s mission in Lebanon provides Covid support kits to local municipalities Hungry people out on streets, but the government nowhere to be seen Nepal Army opens investigation into case of captains thrashing soldier in Congo Govt Making Preparations to Reduce the Tenure of Armed Police Force’s IG to Three Years Tourism entrepreneurs get crash course in Chinese language The FinCEN Files: Nepali banks and companies transact billions of rupees through dubious channels Bamdev Gautam’s appointment as National Assembly member challenged in Supreme Court